GB2055280A - High frequency heating apparatus - Google Patents

High frequency heating apparatus Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2055280A
GB2055280A GB8024882A GB8024882A GB2055280A GB 2055280 A GB2055280 A GB 2055280A GB 8024882 A GB8024882 A GB 8024882A GB 8024882 A GB8024882 A GB 8024882A GB 2055280 A GB2055280 A GB 2055280A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
high frequency
heating apparatus
frequency heating
electromagnetic waves
elongated
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB8024882A
Other versions
GB2055280B (en
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Mitsubishi Electric Corp
Original Assignee
Mitsubishi Electric Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from JP9714679A external-priority patent/JPS5622087A/en
Priority claimed from JP2012480A external-priority patent/JPS56118290A/en
Priority claimed from JP3828280U external-priority patent/JPS6021918Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP3827980U external-priority patent/JPS6127118Y2/ja
Application filed by Mitsubishi Electric Corp filed Critical Mitsubishi Electric Corp
Publication of GB2055280A publication Critical patent/GB2055280A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2055280B publication Critical patent/GB2055280B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/647Aspects related to microwave heating combined with other heating techniques
    • H05B6/6482Aspects related to microwave heating combined with other heating techniques combined with radiant heating, e.g. infrared heating
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/6402Aspects relating to the microwave cavity
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/6447Method of operation or details of the microwave heating apparatus related to the use of detectors or sensors
    • H05B6/645Method of operation or details of the microwave heating apparatus related to the use of detectors or sensors using temperature sensors
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/76Prevention of microwave leakage, e.g. door sealings
    • H05B6/766Microwave radiation screens for windows

Description

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GB 2 055 280 A 1
SPECIFICATION
A high frequency heating apparatus
This invention relates to microwave ovens, and especially to such ovens having vertically 5 translatable members, such as resistance heaters, disposed in the heating room thereof.
It is often desirable that a member or members disposed in the heating room of microwave ovens and extending therefrom through an opening or 10 openings into the exterior thereof be capable of vertical translation. For example, if the metal sheathed resistance heaters which are disposed in the heating room of microwave ovens and extend therefrom into the exterior thereof through the 15 openings defined in the wall of the heating room can be translated vertically, control of the heating intensity to a finer degree becomes possible and higher heating efficiency can be achieved. In the case of conventional microwave ovens in which a 20 rod-shaped heater having a terminal portion thereof extending from the heating room into the exterior thereof is rotated around said terminal portion, the rotational range of the heater has been limited. Thus such conventional microwave 25 ovens have been less than ideal for practical cooking purposes. The above-mentioned advantages resulting from a vertically translatable heater may also result from vertically translatable reflectors, partition plates, or supports for food 30 containers disposed in the heating room of microwave ovens and supported by metal rods extending from the heating room to the exterior thereof through openings disposed in the walls of the heating room. Another case where vertical 35 translation of a member which extends from the interior of the heating room of microwave ovens to the exterior thereof through an opening or openings is desirable is the case of temperature or humidity detectors for the foods to be heated 40 which may be disposed in the heating room of microwave ovens for detecting to what degree the foods have been cooked. By making detectors capable of vertical translation, it becomes possible to place detector heads into the heated foods and 45 to detect the temperature or the humidity of the foods without interrupting the heating operation, thereby realizing automatic control of the output power of a microwave oven.
In any of these cases, however, it has been 50 practically impossible to make such members as described above vertically translatable, because, for vertical translation of the members disposed in the heating room of microwave ovens, one or a plurality of vertically elongated openings must be 55 defined in the walls of the heating room through which said members extend from the interior of the heating room into the exterior thereof and along the longitudinal direction of which said members are translated vertically, and because 60 there has been no method for preventing the leakage of electromagnetic waves through such elongated openings with practical effectiveness and sureness. This leakage of electromagnetic waves is especially serious because the members
65 extending from the interior of the heating room of microwave ovens to the exterior thereof are formed of metal, and such metal members function as antennas which receive and lead out the electromagnetic waves filling the heating 70 room of microwave ovens.
Therefore it is an object of the present invention to provide a high frequency heating apparatus which has disposed in the heating room thereof a vertically translatable member or member while 75 effectively and reliably eliminating the danger of electromagnetic wave leakage from the heating room thereof into the exterior space.
The present invention provides a high frequency heating apparatus, comprising an 80 enclosure defining a heating room for accommodating an article to be heated and having an elongated opening extending therethrough; electromagnetic wave supply means for supplying electromagnetic waves substantially of a 85 predetermined wave length into said heating room for dielectric heating of said article; a movable member extending through said elongated opening from the interior to the exterior of said heating room; means for supporting and guiding 90 said member with respect of said enclosure for a guided translational movement within and along said elongated opening in the enclosure; means for moving said guided member within said elongated opening and holding the member at at 95 least two positions; and electromagnetic wave leakage preventing means for preventing an electromagnetic wave leakage from said heating room through said elongated opening, including means for defining a substantially elongated 100 annular space defined by an electrically conductive material and disposed along a periphery of said elongated opening, said annular space having a circumferentially extending communication port at the inner periphery thereof 105 for introducing therethrough the electromagnetic waves passing through said elongated opening into said annular space, said annular space being dimensioned to be effective for extinguishing by a choke effect the electromagnetic waves 110 introduced therein; whereby said member is translatable within said heating room while the leakage of the electromagnetic waves through said elongated opening is substantially prevented.
Preferably, the longitudinal length of the 115 elongated opening is substantially equal to an odd multiple of a quarter of the fundamental wavelength of the electromagnetic waves.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the first space is stationary with respect of the 120 enclosure and is defined by walls which are fixed to said wall of the enclosure defining the elongated opening, and preferably the communication port of the first space is hermetically sealed by a cover which is formed of 125 a refractory material having a low coefficient of friction and which has a pair of projections which are in contact with or closely adjacent said extending member during the translation of said extending member.
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GB 2 055 280 A 2
In another embodiment of the present invention, the first space is vertically translatable, and the outer side walls and the back wall partly defining the first space is vertically translated with 5 said extending member by the translation mechanism. In this aspect of the present invention, attenuator plates attenuating the electromagnetic waves propagating in the longitudinal direction of the elongated openings 10 may be disposed in the first space parallel to the back wall of the first space, or outside the first space parallel to the side walls of the first space.
In both the above embodiments of the present invention, at least one further space having a 15 communication port situated at path of the electromagnetic waves leaking from said first space, and/or at least one absorber situated at the path of electromagnetic waves leaking from said space may be disposed.
20 Said further space extinguish by choke effect said electromagnetic waves leaking from said first space, and said absorber absorbing and dissipates the energy of said electromagnetic waves leaking from said first space.
25 Preferably, the translation mechanism comprises stopper means which stops and holds the extending member at a plurality of positions which are spaced from each other by a predetermined distance substantially equal to a 30 quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic waves.
The extending member may by one of the following:
1) a resistance heater disposed in the 35 heating room,
2) a wire connecting said resistance heater to a power source,
3) a detector disposed in said heating room and detecting the temperature or the humidity of the
40 food to be heated,
4) a wire connecting said detector to a power source,
5) a rod for supporting a reflector plate disposed in the heating room,
45 6) a rod for supporting a supporter for the container of food, which is disposed in the heating room, or
7) a rod for supporting a partition plate disposed in said heating room and partitioning 50 said room into a plurality of portions thereof.
The invention will now be described further, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a microwave 55 oven according to the present invention, showing the outward appearance thereof;
Figure 2 is a cutaway top view of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing the microwave oven with the upper wall of the outer 60 housing cut away, as viewed from the top;
Figure 3 is a sectional side view of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing a vertical cross section of the microwave oven taken along the line III—III of Figure 2;
65 Figure 4 is a sectional plan view of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing a horizontal cross section of the microwave oven taken along the line IV—IV of Figure 3;
Figure 5 is a cross-sectional side view of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing a vertical cross section of the microwave oven taken along the line V—V of Figure 2;
Figure 6 is a fragmental perspective view of a portion near one of a pair of the end portions of an upper heater disposed in the heating room of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing the outward appearance of one of the pair of the leakage preventing chambers with the translating plate partially cut away along a horizontal line and removed halfway from said one of the pair of the leakage preventing chambers;
Figure 7 is a partial horizontal sectional view of the portion near one of the pair of end portions of the upper heater disposed in the heating room of the microwave oven of Figure 1, showing an enlarged cross section of the portion enclosed by line P of Figure 4;
Figure 8 is a fragmental sectional side view of a second microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 9 is a fragmental sectional top view of the microwave oven of Figure 8, showing a fragmental horizontal cross section thereof;
Figure 10 is a fragmental sectional side view of a third microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 11 is a fragmental sectional side view of a fourth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 12 is a fragmental sectional side view of a fifth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 13 is a fragmental sectional side view of a sixth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 14 is a fragmental sectional top view of seventh microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental horizontal cross section thereof;
Figure 15 is a fragmental sectional side view of an eighth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 16 is a fragmental sectional top view of the microwave oven of Figure 15, showing a fragmental horizontal cross section thereof;
Figure 17 is a fragmental sectional side view of a ninth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 18 is a fragmental sectional side view of a tenth microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental side cross section thereof;
Figure 19 is a fragmental sectional top view of
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GB 2 055 280 A 3
an eleventh microwave oven according to the present invention, showing a fragmental horizontal cross section of a portion at the backside of the heating room thereof including the 5 leakage preventing chambers;
Figure 20 is a fragmental sectional side view of the microwave oven of Figure 19, showing a fragmental side cross section of a portion at the backside of the heating room thereof including the 10 leakage preventing chambers;
Figure 21 is a perspective view of one of the attenuator plates disposed in the leakage preventing chambers of the microwave oven of Figure 19;
1 5 Figure 22 is a perspective view of one of the attenuator plates formed by the bent portions of the partition plates fixed to the back wall of the heating box of the microwave oven of Figure 10.
In the drawings, like reference numerals or 20 characters designate like or corresponding parts or dimensions.
In Figures 1 to 7, a microwave oven embodying the present invention having a rod-shaped resistance heater which extends from the heating 25 room thereof to the exterior thereof and which is capable of being vertically translated is shown.
The microwave oven comprises a main body 1, a metal outer housing 2 forming the outer shell of the main body 1, a heating box 3 forming a 30 heating room 4 therein, a metal front plate 5 which is fixed to the front peripheries of the heating box 3 and the metal outer housing 2 and has defined therein a front aperture 6 forming a window 7, and a door 8 which is capable of 35 closing and opening the front aperture 6 of the heating room 4, and is rotatably mounted to the main body 1 through a shaft 9.
The microwave oven also comprises a door handle 10 attached to the door 8, an operator's 40 panel 11, a guide port 1 6 defined in the operator's panel 11 and guiding a knob 14 for the translation of a sheathed resistance heater 19 which is described later. The operator's panel 11 has disposed thereon a knob 13 of a timer 12 which 45 controls the microwave heating time and the resistance heater heating time, and an operation button 1 5 by which a switch (not shown) commanding the initiation of heating can be operated. In the heating room 4, a supporter 17 50 for a food container may be disposed when necessary. A pair of vertically elongated openings 18 are defined in the back wall of the heating box 3 in the vertical direction with respect to the microwave oven which is set in the proper 55 position thereof. As is shown in detail in Figure 7, the elongated openings 18 have a width A of 10 mm and length B in the vertical direction of 1 53 mm which is substantially equal to 5 times a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the 60 electromagnetic waves utilized in the microwave oven, namely 30.6 mm, as the fundamental frequency of electromagnetic waves utilized in the microwave oven is substantially equal to 2450 MHz. This length B was chosen because as 65 a result of repeated experiments, it was found that when the length B of the elongated openings 18 is an odd multiple (namely 3 times, 5 times, 7 times, and so on) of a quarter of the fundamental wavelength of the electromagnetic waves filling the 70 interior of the heating room 4, the amount of the electromagnetic waves leaking or escaping from the interior of the heating room 4 through the elongated openings 18 is minimized. Of course, other lengths of the elongated openings equal to, 75 for example, 3 or 7 times a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic waves utilized in the microwave oven may equally be chosen if such dimensions are preferable.
In the heating room 4 of the microwave oven 80 are disposed two resistance heaters 19 and 20 sheathed in hollow metal cylinders of a diameter C of about 7 mm. Both ends of the heater 19 extend to the exterior of the heating room 4 through said openings 18. The end portions of the lower heater 85 20 also extend to the exterior of the heating room 4 through the back wall of the heating box 3.
A pair of partition plates 21 forming a pair of hollow obiong cylinders with base lines coinciding with the peripheries of said pair of elongated 90 openings 18 are fixed, through a pair of flanges thereof projecting outwardly from the front bases of said cylinders, to the annular portions of the exterior surface of the back wall of the heating box 3, which surround said peripheries. As shown in 95 Figure 7, the depth D of the partition plates 21 or the height in the axial direction of said cylinders is designed to be equal to about 7 to 8 mm. Thus the cylindrical portions of said partition plates 21 surround both end portions of said upper heater 100 19.
A pair of metal shield plates 22 having the form of oblong cylinders with open front bases have flanges 23 projecting outwardly from the front bases of the cylindrical portions of the metal shield 105 plates 22. The metal shield plates 22 are formed by a press machine from a single sheet of metal, and the flanges 23 are spot welded to the heating box 4.
Said pair of partition plates 21 and said pair of 110 shield plates 22 together with the peripheral annular portions of the exterior surface of the back wall of the heating box 3 enclose a pair of first choke chambers or first electromagnetic wave leakage preventing chambers 24. A widthwise 115 depth E of the chambers 24 measured from the central points thereof along the direction of width of said chambers 24 is substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wavelength of the electromagnetic waves utilized in the microwave 120 oven, and a height G of the chambers 24 in the vertical direction of the microwave oven measured from the peripheries of a pair of elongated openings 25 defined in the back walls of the shield plates 22 is equal to about 27 mm which is about 125 3 mm shorter than a quarter of said fundamental wavelength. Said elongated openings 25 defined in the shield plates 22 have a length F equal to about 130 mm.
The upper heater 19 can be vertically translated 130 along a vertical length H of about 123 mm by a
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GB 2 055 280 A 4
translation mechanism which will be described hereinafter, and can be stopped and held only at positions which are spaced from each other by an interval J which is substantially equal to a quarter 5 of said fundamental wave-length. Therefore, the upper heater 10 can be stopped and held at five different positions or heights. A depth K of the chambers 24 is equal to 15 mm which is substantially equal to one eighth of said 10 fundamental wave-length. A pair of communication ports 26 for the pair of leakage preventing chambers 24 is defined by the metal partition plates 21 and the metal shield plates 22, and are hermetically sealed by covers 27 which 15 are inserted in the interiors of the shield plates 22 in advance around the elongated openings 25. The covers 27 are formed of a refractory material having a high transmissivity to electromagnetic waves and a low coefficient of friction, such as 20 polytetrafluoroethylene, as integral unitary wholes, and have substantially the form of oblong rings or cylinders with interior circumferencially extending projections which come in contact with the end portions of the upper heater 19. 25 Each of a pair of metal translating plates 28 has a pair of end portions 30 bent to the back wall of the heating room 4 to surround the sides of each of the shield plates 22, and is of sufficient dimensions to cover the elongated opening 25 of 30 each of the shield plates 22 at any position thereof along the translation path.
A pair of electromagnetic wave absorbing members 29 are held by said pair of bent end portions 30 of each of the translating plates 28. 35 The absorbing members 29 are formed of a material having a certain degree of conductance to allow some current to flow therethrough when placed in an electromagnetic field, thereby dissipating the energy of the electromagnetic field. 40 An example of such a material of which the absorbing members 29 can be formed is a plastic material composed offerrite dust with a polyethylene binder. The absorbing members 29 are disposed along the whole vertical lengths of 45 the end portions 30 of the pair of translating plates 28.
A pair of spacers 31 in the form of annular * plates interposed between the translating plates 28 and the shield plates 22 are formed of a 50 material such as refractory synthetic resin having a low coefficient of friction and are fixed to the back surfaces of the pair of shield plates 22. A pair of elongated openings 32 are defined along the central lines of the spacers 31 to have a length 55 and a width which substantially coincide with those of the elongated openings 25 defined in the pair of shield plates 22 so that the elongated openings 32 defined in the spacers and the elongated openings 25 defined in the shield plates 60 22 come to be substantially in registry with each other. Circular openings 33 are defined in the translating plates 28 to allow the end portions of the upper heater 19 to extend therethrough.
A metal supporter plate 34 fixed to the pair of 65 translating plates 28 to bridge the translating plates 28 has on both sides thereof two pairs of rollers 35 formed of refractory synthetic resin and held by holders 37 so that the supporter plate 34 is capable of being translated in the vertical direction with respect to the main body 1 set in the proper position thereof, with the rollers 35 being guided along a pair of rails 36 fixed by screws 47 to supporters 46 which are fixed in their turn to the exterior surface of the heating box 3.
Two circular openings 38 defined in the supporter plate 34 to be in registry with the circular openings 33 defined in the translatings plages 28 are covered by a pair of metal casings 39 in the form of hollow circular cylinders with open front bases and closed back bases. The flanges projecting from the front bases of cylindrical portions of the casings 39 are spot welded to the back surface of the supporter plate 34. The cylindrical portions of the casings 39 have inner radius L and inner depth M substantially equal to a quarter of said fundamental wavelength, and the back base portions of the casings 39 have defined at the central portion thereof a pairof circular openings 40 through which the ends of the upper heaters 19 tightly extend. Thus, a pair of second electromagnetic wave leakage preventing chambers 42 are formed between the supporter plate 34 and the pair of casings 39. The communication ports 41 thereof through which electromagnetic waves may be introduced into the second leakage preventing chambers 42 are situated around the end portions of the upper heater 19. A pair of stopper rings 43 fixed in advance to both end portions of the upper heater 19, for example by welding, and a pair of fixer rings 44 formed of a resilient material and disengageably engaging with the ends of the upper heater 19 extending from the back surfaces of the casings 39, fix the upper heater 19 to the casings 39. A pair of lines 45 connect the ends of the upper heater 19 to a power source (not shown).
A metal plate 48 with a U-shaped horizontal cross section fixed to the back wall of the heating box 3 along the central vertical line of said back wall has both sides thereof bent in the lateral direction to form bent portions having an L-shaped horizontal cross section. Said bent portions of the metal plate 48 function as guide rails for the rollers 49 supported by the supporter plate 34, and have fixed on the surface thereof opposing the shield plates 22 a pair of electromagnetic wave absorbing members 50 in the form of elongated plates. The absorbing members 50 may be formed of a plastic material composed of fine particles of a ferrite material with a polyethylene binder, like the absorbing members 29 disposed on the bent portions 30 of translating plates 28. The rollers 49 are held by the roller holders 51.
A fixer pin 52 fixed to a central portion of the supporter plate 34 fixes the first lever 57 to the supporter plate 34. A first pin holder 53 fixed to the upper wall of the heating box 3 holds a pin 54 by which a pain of V-shaped connector rods 55
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are rotatably supported. The arms 56 thereof extending in the backward direction hold a pair of pins 58 which rotatably support the first lever 57 at one end thereof, the other end of the first lever 5 57 being engaged with said fixer pin 52.The other arms 59 of the connector rods 55 extending to the forward direction are rotatably connected to one end of a second lever 64 through a pin 60.
A supporter plate 61 fixed to the front plate 5 10 rotatably supports an interlocking plate 62
through a pin 63, and the other end of the second lever 64 is rotatably connected to one end of the interlocking plate 62 through a pin 65.
A third lever 66 is rotatably fixed to the other 15 end of the interlocking plate 62 at one end thereof through a pin 67, and an operation lever 68 which is rotatably fixed to the other end of the third lever through a pin 69 at one end thereof rotates around the pin 71 held by another pin holder 70 20 fixed to the front plate 5. The other end of the operation lever 68 projects from the guide port 16 defined in the operator's panel 11.
The operation lever 68 extends between the upper and lower plates of a stopper 77 to be 2 5 sandwiched by said plates of the stopper 7 7
which guide the operation lever 68. Five recesses 78 are defined at equiangular intervals in the surface of the lower plate of the stopper 77 which opposes the operation lever 68. The recesses 78 30 are capable of engaging with a projection formed on the lower surface of the operation lever 68 so that the lever 68 can be stopped and held at five different positions, thereby allowing the upper heater 19 to be stopped and held at five different 35 positions along the translation length H, which are spaced from each other by an interval substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-length, as shown in Figure 3.
A metal socket 72 disposed around the end 40 portions of the lower heater 20 extending into the exterior of the heating box 3 prevents the leakage of electromagnetic waves therefrom. A line 73 connects the lower heater 20 to the power source (not shown).
45 A magnetron oscillator 75 generates the electromagnetic waves having a frequency suitable for the dielectric heating of food X, which is substantially equal to 2450 MHz, and the generated electromagnetic waves are introduced 50 into the heating room from a port 79 defined in the central portion of the upper wall of the heating box 3 via a wave guide 74 which connects said magnetron oscillator 75 to said port 79. A transformer 76 supplies high voltage power to the 55 magnetron oscillator 75. Food X with a container thereof may be placed on the supporter 17.
The operation of the apparatus as hereinabove described is now explained.
When the knob 14 on the operator's panel 11 is 60 moved by an operator in the direction of the arrow v, this movement is transmitted through the third lever 66 to the interlocking plate 62, and further to the connecting rods 55 through the second lever 64 as is shown by the arrows v. The length of 65 movement of the knob 14 at the end of the operation lever 68 is magnified by a certain ratio by said V-shaped connecting rods 55, said ratio being determined by the ratio of the lengths of the arms 56 and 59 of the connecting rods 55. Thus the supporter plate 34 and the pair of translating plates 28 together with the upper heater 19 are translated vertically downwards in the direction of the arrow v by an amount which is equal to said length of movement of the knob 14 multiplied by said ratio, the supporter plate 34 being guided by the pair of guide rail 36 and the metal plate 48 via the rollers 35 and 49.
As the operating lever 68 can be stopped and held by the stopper 77 at five predetermined positions along the path of movement thereof, the supporter plate 34 can also be stopped and held at the position corresponding to said five predetermined positions. Thus, as described hereinbefore, the heater 19 can be stopped at one of five positions which are separated from each other by an equal distance J substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic waves utilized in the microwave range, that is to say, the electromagnetic waves generated by said magnetron oscillator 75. When current is supplied to the upper and lower heaters 19 and 20 with the upper heater 19 stopped and held at one of said positions, the food or the article to be heated X can be cooked in a short time by the heat received from the upper and lower heaters 19 and 20.
And when the magnetron oscillator 75 is driven to generate electromagnetic waves having a fundamental frequency substantially equal to 2450 MHz, with the upper and lower heaters 19 and 20 in this state, the electromagnetic waves thus generated are introduced into the heating room 4 from the port 79 through the wave guide
74 connecting the magnetron oscillator 75 with the port 79, and thus the food X contained in the container placed on the supporter 17 is also heated from within by dielectric heating and is cooked very quickly.
During the time when the magnetron oscillator
75 is operated, the electromagnetic waves generated by the magnetron 75 and introduced into the heating room 4 tend to leak or escape to the exterior of the heating room 4 through the pair of elongated openings 18 defined in the back wall of the heating box 3. But because the vertical length B of the pair of parallel openings is substantially equal to five times a quarter of the fundamental wave length of said electromagnetic waves, the electromagnetic waves are effectively prevented from escaping therethrough.
As described hereinabove, it has been found by a series of experiments that the amount of leaking electromagnetic waves can be minimized by designing the length of the elongated openings to be substantially equal to an odd multiple, e.g. 3, 5, 7, and so on, of a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of said electromagnetic waves. Conversely, the amount of leaking electromagnetic waves was found to become greater when the length B of the elongated
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openings is set to be equal to an even multiple, e.g. 2,4, 6, and so on, of a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of said electromagnetic waves. These experimental results can be 5 explained by the theory that length B of the elongated openings 18 equal to an even multiple of said quarter of the fundamental wave-length gives rise to a resonance of electromagnetic waves at the elongated openings 18, as it does in 10 the case of wave guides, while a length B equal to an odd multiple of a quarter of said fundamental wavelength occasions an anti-resonance phenomenon, or the mutual cancellation of the electromagnetic waves by reflections of the 15 electromagnetic waves, thereby reducing the amount of electromagnetic waves escaping from the openings 18. If the vertical length F of the pair of elongated openings 25 is set to be equal to the length B of the elongated openings 18, the 20 conditions for the anti-resonance phenomenon is satisfied at the elongated openings 25, but then the function of the back walls of the shield plates of introducing into the first leakage preventing chambers the electromagnetic waves which tend 25 to escape into the exterior of the heating room 4 through the elongated openings 18 and 25 is reduced, thereby allowing a greater amount of the electromagnetic waves to leak from the elongated openings 25.
30 By designing the length and positions of the elongated openings 18 and 25 together with the geometry of the first leakage preventing chambers as hereinbefore described, the leakage of the electromagnetic waves through the elongated 35 openings 18 and 25 is prevented firstly by the fact that the amount of the electromagnetic waves passing through the openings 18 is limited by said anti-resonance phenomenon, and secondly by the fact that the electromagnetic waves which have 40 passed through the openings 18 are introduced into the first leakage preventing chambers 24 via the communication ports 26 and are prevented from leaking into the elongated openings 25 by the choke effect, that is to say, by the 45 phenomenon that the electromagnetic waves are mutually cancelled by the reflections thereof. The leakage preventing faculty of the arrangements as hereinabove described is enhanced by the fact that the length F of the elongated openings 25 50 deviates from an even multiple of a quarter of said fundamental wave-length, and thus the openings 25 themselves have the function of preventing the leakage of electromagnetic waves.
The little amount of electromagnetic waves 55 escaping from the elongated openings 25 defined in the shield plates 22 is either introduced into the second leakage preventing chambers 42 through the circular openings 33 and 38 which are defined in the translating plates 28 and the supporter 60 plate 34 respectively, thereby cancelling each other at the communication ports 41 by the choke effect, or they are absorbed by the absorbing members 29 and 50 which are disposed at right angles to the direction of leakage of the 65 electromagnetic waves which tend to escape to the exterior through the narrow gaps formed between the shield plates 22 and the translating plates 28.
As described hereinabove, it can be ensured that the electromagnetic waves which tend to escape into the exterior of the heating room 4 through the elongated openings 18 are either extinguished by the choke effect or absorbed, thereby preventing the electronic components included in the main body 1 from being adversely affected and prevented from proper functioning by the noises created by the leaking electromagnetic waves, and also ensuring that any human beings near the microwave oven do not suffer any harmful effects from electromagnetic waves leaking from the range.
The covers 27 which hermetically seal the communcation ports 26 of the first leakage preventing chambers 24 prevent the vapors or impurities arising from the food X and the heat developed by the heaters 19 and 20 from entering into the first leakage preventing chambers 24, and thus ensures that the shield plates 22 are kept at a low temperature. Therefore, the absorber members 29 can be prevented from being adversely affected by high temperature. In addition, the spacers 31 interposed between the shield plates 22 and the translating plates 28 effectively block the transfer of heat from the shield plates 22 to the translating plates 28.
Because the portions of covers 27 which cover the vertical lengths of the elongated ports 18, at least, have projections which are in contact with the end portions of the upper heater 19, and the end portions of the upper heater 19 are continuously held between said projections is close contact therewith, the upper heater 19 can be kept at a position thereof with certainty, and thus the distances between the end portions of the upper heater 19 and the side walls of the first leakage preventing chambers 24 can be kept constant. Therefore the leakage of electromagnetic waves is prevented stably and effectively. A further advantage of the disposition of the covers 27 is that the translation of the upper heater 19 can be effected by an operator without exertion because the upper heater 19 is guided smoothly by the projections of the covers 27 without meeting any obstruction.
Further embodiments of the present invention which are described in the following are similar in structure and operation to the first embodiment of Figures 1 to 7, except for some additional features and the structures of the portions including the first leakage preventing chambers. The details of the structures and the operations of the embodiments which are similar to those of the first embodiment are omitted from the following descriptions and drawings thereof. For such details, refer to the descriptions and drawings of the first embodiment. In particular the translation mechanism and the magnetron oscillator of the following embodiments is completely omitted from the drawings thereof.
Referring now to Figures 8 and 9, a second
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embodiment of the present invention is described.
A metal rotatable table 80 on which an article to be heated or food with a container may be placed can be superposed on a driving disk 81 5 which is disposed in the lower portion of the heating room 4 and is driven by an electric motor (not shown) disposed outside of the heating room 4. Two pairs of horizontal projections 82 are integrally formed on the inner surfaces of the side 10 walls of the heating box 3. A supporter 17 for a container of food which, in this embodiment, has the form of a rectangular saucer, may be inserted between said pairs of projections 82 when desired. A pair of elongated openings 18 have a 15 vertical length B substantially equal to three times a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic wave utilized in the microwave oven.
A plurality of ports 83 are defined in an upper 20 portion of one of the side walls of the heating box 3, and an exhaust duct 84 is connected therewith at one end thereof, the other end thereof communicating with the exterior of the outer housing 2. A temperature sensor S of a 25 temperature controller of the variable operation temperature type (not shown) which detects the temperature of the exhaust air in the duct 84 and controls the supply of power to the heaters 19 and 20, thereby keeping the temperature within the 30 heating room 4 at a desired predetermined temperature, is disposed in the interior of said duct 84. A plurality of ports 113 for exhausting hot air filling the interior of the outer housing 2 are defined in the upper wall of the outer housing 2.
-35 A width wise depth E of the first chambers 24 measured from the central points thereof along the direction of width of the chambers 24 and a depth K of the first chambers 24 is substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-40 length. A length F of the elongated openings 25 defined in the shield plates 22 in this embodiment is designed to be equal to the length B of the elongated openings 18 defined in the back wall of the heating box 3, that is to say, substantially 45 equal to three times a quarter of said fundamental wave-length. The communication ports 26 of the first leakage preventing chambers 24, which are not covered in this second embodiment, may also be hermetically sealed by covers corresponding to 50 the covers 27 disposed in the first embodiment. A single translating supporter plate 85 corresponding to the pair of translating plates 28 and the supporter plate 34 of the first embodiment as shown in Figures 1 to 7 directly 55 opposes the back surfaces of the pair of the shield plates 22, forming gaps T of predetermined width therebetween without the pair of spacers 31 of the first embodiment being interposed in the gaps T. Absorbing members 29 corresponding to the 60 absorbing members 29 disposed on the bent portions 30 of the translating plates 28 of the first embodiment are disposed on the metal plates 30 projecting from the single translating supporter plate 85 and oppose narrow passages U of the 65 leaking electromagnetic waves which are perpendicular to the gaps T. A pair of circular openings 86 corresponding to the circular openings 33 and 38 of the first embodiment are defined in the translating supporter plate 85. The 70 circular openings 86 have a diameter equal to the width of the elongated openings 25 defined in the shield plates 22. The inner radius L and the inner depth M of the casings 39 forming the second • leakage preventing chambers 42 are equal to the 75 corresponding dimensions L and M of the casings 39 of the first embodiment, that is to say, to a quarter of said fundamental wave-length.
The guide rails 35 guiding the rollers 35 in this embodiment are fixed, directly or indirectly, to the 80 side walls of the outer housing 2 of the microwave oven.
A pair of metal terminal boxes 87 fixed to the casings 39 include therein terminals 88 of the upper heater 19 which are capable of engaging 85 with and disengaging from the sockets at the ends of the power supply plates 80 disposed in the terminal rooms Z which include filler members 90 formed of a ceramic or a refractory synthetic resin material which hold tightly between the upper and 90 lower portions thereof said power supply plates 89 formed of metal. Thus the upper heater 19 is disengagable from the main body 1 of the microwave oven when desired. The lower terminal box 72 having a similar structure to that of the 95 terminal boxes 87 has engaged therein the terminals of the lower heater 20 which is also disengagable from the main body 1 of the microwave oven.
A port 79 defined in the upper wall of the 100 heating box 3 which introduces the electromagnetic waves generated by the magnetron oscillator (not shown) into the heating room 4 is hermetically sealed by a cover 91 formed of a refractory synthetic resin having a 105 high trartsmissivity to high frequency electromagnetic waves.
A metal reflector 92 formed of a single stainless steel plate worked by a press machine is coated with a black coating layer formed of 110 enamel or refractory paint. A supply port 93 which is cut in the reflector 92 in the horizontal central portion thereof deviating from the portions thereof which are directly above the upper heater 19 is in registry with said port 79 in the vertical direction 115 of the main body 1 of the microwave oven set in the proper position thereof. The reflector 92 is formed in such a way that the portions around the supply port 93 are tilted so that the outer peripheral portions of the reflector 92 are more 120 elevated than the inner peripheral portions thereof surrounding the supply port 93. The reflector 92 having pending portions 94 pending from the outer periphery thereof, is fixed to the upper heater 19 through a plurality of insulators 95 125 formed of ceramic, and thus is translated vertically with the upper heater 19 by the translation mechanism (not shown).
The electromagnetic waves which tend to escape from the interior of the heating room 4 130 through the elongated openings 18 are effectively
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and positively mutually cancelled by the choke effect by the first and the second leakage preventing chambers 24 and 42, or absorbed by electromagnetic wave absorbing members 29, in 5 just the same way as in the case of the first embodiment.
The gaps T and the narrow passages v disposed between the shield plates 22 and the translating supporter plate 85, and between the shield plates 10 22 and the absorbing members 29, respectively, prevent the transfer of heat from the shield plates 22 to the absorbing members 29 and thus prevent the members 29 from being deformed or degraded in quality by said heat.Therefore, the 15 stable electromagnetic wave absorbing faculty of the absorbing members 29 can be kept at a high level over a long period.
Because the terminal boxes 87 connecting the terminals 88 of the upper heater 19 to a power 20 source (not shown) are disposed outside the first and the second leakage preventing chambers 24 and 42, the terminal rooms Z are substantially free from the adverse effects of the high frequency electromagnetic waves leaking from the interior of 25 the heating room 4. The back walls of the casings 39 and the walls of the terminal boxes 87 enclosing the terminal rooms Z also prevent the leaking electromagnetic waves from entering into the terminal rooms Z. Therefore, there are no 30 such disadvantages that the electric sparks are hit across the terminals 88 and the power supply plates 89 by the high potential difference therebetween caused by the high frequency electromagnetic waves, and that the appliances 35 on the side of the power source are adversely affected by the electric noises transmitted along the line 45 from the terminals 88 of the upper heater 19.
The ceramic or refractory synthetic resin filler 40 materials 90 which fill the interior of the terminal boxes 87 may also be disposed in the interior of the first and the second chambers 24 and 42. These filler materials, when thus disposed, prevent the transfer of heat and vapor generated in the 45 heating room 4 during the heating period from entering into the terminal boxes Z, and thus ensures a stable and sure supply of power to the terminals 88 of the upper heater 19, preventing corrosion or a degradation of the insulting 50 capability of the terminals 88 or the components surrounding the terminals 88.
Referring to Figure 10, a third embodiment of the present invention is now described.
In this third embodiment, a metal reflector 92 55 disposed in the heating room 4 of the microwave oven is supported by a pair of supporter rods 96 extending from the interior of the heating room 4 to the exterior thereof, and is vertically translatable through a translation mechanism (not 60 shown) which is similar to that of the first embodiment. A reflector 92 of this embodiment has a back plate 97 pending from the back side periphery of the horizontal portion of the reflector 92. The back plate 97 is designed to have such 65 dimensions that when the supporter rods 96 are translated to the upper most position thereof, the back plate 97 covers the whole lengths B of the elongated openings 18, forming gaps of a predetermined width therebetween. A pair of holes 98 defined in the back plate 97 engage with the front ends of the supporter rods 96.
A cover plate 99 formed of a refractory material having a high transmissivity to high frequency electromagnetic waves hermetically seals the supply port 93 defined in the central horizontal portion of the reflector 92 in registry with the port 79 defined in the upper wall of the heating box 3. A socket 100 fixed to the reflector 92 connects the terminals of the upper heater 19 fixed to the lower surface of the reflector 92 to a power source (not shown). Through an opening 102 defined in the horizontal portion of the reflector 92 and an opening 101 defined in the upper wall of the heating box 3, extends a flexible cord 103 which connects the socket 100 to a cord reel 104 which is disposed outside the heating room 4 and automatically winds up the cord 103 which is covered with a flexible shield cover preventing the transmission of the high frequency electromagnetic waves and formed, for example, of metal mesh or gauze.
A pair of annular electromagnetic wave absorbing members 105 surround the back ends of the supporter rods 96. The absorbing members 29 disposed on the metal plates 30 of the translating supporter plate 85 oppose the upper and the lower walls of the shield plates 22 as well as the side walls thereof.
For a detailed description of the structure of the third embodiment in respects other than hereinabove described, refer to the descriptions of the first and second embodiment, which have similar constructions to the third embodiment.
As the third embodiment is constructed as hereinabove described, when the reflector 92 and the upper heater 19 are translated vertically downwards together with the translating supporter plate 85 by the translation mechanism (not shown), the translation thereof meets no obstruction because the flexible cord 103 is automatically led out of the cord reel 104. The reflector 94 reflects the heat developed in and radiated from the upper and lower heaters 19 and 20, and the natural convection due to the hot air is obstructed by the pending portions 94 pending from the horizontal portion of the reflector 94, and thus the heat therefrom is effectively transmitted to the food or the article to be heated.
The leakage of electromagnetic waves through the elongated openings 18 is prevented in a similar way to those of the first or second embodiments. In addition, because the back plate 97 of the reflector 92 covers the portions of the elongated openings 18 which are situated under the upper periphery of the back plate 97, the amount of electromagnetic waves entering into the elongated openings 18 are limited in advance. Further, because the absorbing members 29 surround all the side walls including the upper and lower walls of the shield plates 22, the leakage
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preventing function of the absorbing members 29 is further ensured and enhanced. The back plate 97 is useful also for preventing contaminations such as drops of oil splashed from the food in the 5 heating room 4 from entering into the elongated opening 18.
Referring to Figure 11, a fourth embodiment of the present invention is now described.
In this fourth embodiment, a rack 106 for 10 supporting the supporter 17 for a food container having the form of a rectangular plate is supported by metal U-shaped supporter rod 107 thereof,
both end portions of which extend from the interior of the heating room 4 into the exterior thereof. The. 15 rack 106 is capable of being vertically translated together with the supporter rod 107 thereof by a translation mechanism (not shown) which is similar to the one disposed in the first embodiment. The rack 106 comprises, besides the 20 supporter rod 107, a plurality of transversal metal rods 108 bridging the pair of arms of the U-shaped supporter rod 107. The upper heater 19 as well as the lower heater 20 of this fourth embodiment is fixed to the heating box 3, and is not capable of 25 being vertically translated. For respects other than hereinbefore described, as the structure of the fourth embodiment is similar to that of the first or second embodiment, refer to the descriptions thereof for a more detailed 30 explanation.
By vertically translating the rack 106, the supporter 17 for a food container and therefore the food placed thereon can be placed at any desired position between the upper and the lower 35 heaters 19 and 20, so that finer control of heating intensity becomes possible.
As will be readily understood, because of the heavy load which may be placed on the rack 106, the supporter rod 107 must have dimensions and 40 a structure ensuring sufficient strength to bear such a load.
Referring to Figure 12, of the drawings, a fifth embodiment of the present invention is now described.
45 In this fifth embodiment, a detector 109 which detects the temperature of the food or the article to be heated and controls the supply of power to the magnetron oscillator (not shown) and/or the heaters 19 and 20 is disposed in the heating room 50 4 and extends from the interior of the heating room 4 to the exterior thereof through an elongated opening 18 defined vertically along the central line of the back wall of the heating box 3. The detector 109 which is capable of being 55 vertically translated by a translation mechanism (not shown) similar to the one of the first embodiment comprises a main body 110 formed of a metal tube, and a detector head 111 which is formed at one end of the main body 110 and 60 includes therein an element having resistivity which varies with the change of temperature thereof, for example, a thermistor having a negative temperature to resistance characteristic.
A first leakage preventing chamber 24 includes 65 therein an insulator 112 formed of an insulating material such as a ceramic or a refractory synthetic resin. Because the electromagnetic waves when propagating through such an insulating material have shorter wave-lengths 70 than when propagating through air, the depth K of the first chamber 24 is designed at a shorter value than a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic waves in air, that is to say, it • is designed to be substantially equal to a quarter 75 of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic waves propagating in said insulator 112. Other dimensions of the first chamber 24 can be made smaller in proportion.
By the construction of the fifth embodiment as 80 hereinabove described, when the head 111 of the detector 110 is inserted in the food placed on the . rotatable table 80, the detector 110 detects the temperature of the food during the heating operation and automatically stops the supply of 85 power to the magnetron oscillator (not shown) and/or the heaters 19 and 20, when the detected temperature reaches a predetermined level. Thus, by presetting said predetermined temperature to a desired level to suit the cooking of the food, over-90 heating of the food can be avoided. In addition, the heating operation can be effectively carried out without any danger of the operator being burned while translating the detector 109, because the translation of the detector 109 can be effected 95 from outside by the translation mechanism (not shown).
The detector 109 detecting the temperature of the food of this fifth embodiment may, of course, be replaced by a detector which detects 100 conditions other than the temperature of the food, such as the humidity thereof.
Further, as the amount of electromagnetic waves leaking along the detector 109 is negligible, the control signals are free from the 105 noises due to the leaking electromagnetic waves, and thus stable control is ensured.
Referring now to Figure 13 of the drawings, a sixth embodiment of the present invention is described.
110 In the sixth embodiment, a partition plate 114 which partitions the heating room 4 into two spaces situated thereabove and thereunder and which has fixed on the lower surface thereof an upper heater 19, is supported by a pair of 115 supporter rods 115 thereof which extend from the interior of the heating room 4 into the exterior thereof through a pair of elongated openings 18 and are capable of being vertically translated by a translation mechanism (not shown). The partition 120 plate 114 is formed of a metal plate and comprises a flat horizontal portion which substantially traverses the whole horizontal cross section of the heating room 4, and pending portions 11 6 pending from the outer peripheries 125 of the horizontal portion of the partition plate 114. The front ends of the supporter rods 115 engage with holes 117 defined in one of the pending portions 116.
A supply port 119 for the electromagnetic 130 waves radiated from the port 79 is defined in the
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central portion of the flat horizontal portion of the partition plate 114 in registry with the port 79 defined in the upper wall of the heating box 3, and is hermetically sealed by a cover 118 formed of a 5 refractory material having a high transmissivity to high frequency electromagnetic waves. The supporter rods 115 have fixed thereon substantially at the middle portions thereof electromagnetic wave absorbing members 120 in 10 the form of annuli. A steam port 121 is defined in one of the side walls of the heating box for the purpose of introducing steam generated outside the heating room 4, which is useful in the cooking of some foods.
15 The elements 100 to 104 are substantially the same as the corresponding elements 100 to 104 of the third embodiment described in conjunction with Figure 10.
By the structure of the sixth embodiment as 20 hereinabove described, by setting the partition plate 114 and the upper heating 19 at a desired height and by energizing the upper and the lower heaters 19 and 20, the space under the partition plate 114 of the heating room 4 containing the 25 food can be raised to high temperature in a short time which is necessary for some particular cooking purposes.
Further, by introducing steam into the heating room 4 through the port 121, steaming of the 30 food can also be effected.
Thus the time needed for the cooking of food by the heaters 19 and 20, and by the steam introduced from the port 121 can be substantially shortened. And as the electromagnetic waves 35 from the port 79 can be radiated through the port 119 into the space under the partition plate 114 irrespective of the position of the partition plate 114, the food or the article to be heated can be quickly heated from within. Thus the quick, 40 uniform, and effective heating and cooking of food can be effected with the help of the heaters 19 and 20 and the steam introduced from the port 121 into the heating room 4.
Referring to Figure 14 of the drawings, a 45 seventh embodiment of the present invention is now described.
As in the case of the first and the second embodiments, an upper heater 19 disposed in the heating room 4 and extending therefrom into the 50 exterior thereof is capable of being vertically translated by a translation mechanism (not shown). In this seventh embodiment, additional pairs of rollers 35 are mounted on both sides of the translating supporter plate 85 on the front 55 surface thereof through roller holders 37, and are guided by the guide rails 36 attached to the back surface of the back wall of the heating box 3 with a plate 122 formed of a refractory material having low heat conductance interposed therebetween. 60 At the center of the translating supporter plate 85 there is also disposed a roller 49 held by roller holders 51 and guided by a metai plate 48 which is fixed to the back wall of the heating box 3 and which has fixed thereon a pair of absorbing 65 members 50. Absorbing members 123 disposed on the guide rails 36 fixed to the back wall of the heating box 3 oppose the whole length of the side walls of the shield plates 22 and form gaps V with the metal plates 30.
As the electromagnetic waves escaping from the leakage preventing chambers 24 are absorbed in two stages by the absorbing members 29 and 123 disposed along the direction of leakage of the electromagnetic waves, the amount of the leaking electromagnetic waves can be reduced to a much smaller magnitude. In addition, as the absorbing members 123 are disposed on the guide rails 36, the structure is relatively simple.
The first seven embodiments of the present invention as hereinabove described in which the first electromagnetic leakage preventing chambers 24 are stationary with respect to the heating box 3, can be subjected to modifications without deviating from the principles of the present invention. For example, instead of extending the end portions of the upper heater 19 from the interior of the heating room 4 into the exterior thereof, as was the case in the first or the second embodiment, it is possible to extend the lines 45 connecting the terminals of the upper heater 19 to the power source (not shown), from the interior of the heating room into the exterior thereof, without impairing the leakage preventing faculty of these embodiments. This is also true of the line 45 of the fifth embodiment.
In the following, four further embodiments of the present invention in which the first leakage preventing chambers are capable of being vertically translated together with a vertically translatable member extending from the interior of the heating room into the exterior thereof are described.
Referring to Figures 15 and 16 of the drawings, an eighth embodiment of the present invention wherein an upper heater 19 extending from the interior of the heating room 4 into the exterior thereof is capable of being vertically translated is now described.
Two shield plates 22 fixed to the translating supporter plate 85 are in contact with the back surface of the back wall of the heating box 3 around the elongated openings 18, and are capable of being vertically translated. A pair of first leakage preventing chambers 24 formed between the back wall of the heating box 3 and the shield plates 22 have communcation ports 26, and have a widthwise depth E measured from the centers of the chambers 24 which is substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave length of the electromagnetic waves utilized, and a depth K which is longer than a quarter of the fundamental wavelength by a small amount. The bent portions of the shield plates 22 at the peripheries thereof form a pair of choke rooms 24A having the form of annuli in the first leakage preventing chambers 24. The choke rooms 24A have communication ports 26A, and have height N and depth 0 which are substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-length. The translating supporter plate 85 is capable of being vertically translated by a
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translation mechanism (not shown) with the rollers 35 guided along the guide rails 36.
A pair of metal plates 30 fixed around the whole lengths of the outer peripheral surfaces of 5 the shield plates 22 is in contact with the back wall of the heating box 3 and metal partition plates 124 fixed to the heating box 3. The metal plates 30 have fixed thereon electromagnetic wave absorbing members 29 which oppose the 10 whole peripheral surfaces of the shield plates 22 with gaps U having a depth substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-length formed therebetween. The partition plates 124 fixed to the upper and the back wall of the heating box 3 15 have U-shaped horizontal cross sections above the heating box 3, with two arms of V-shape extending in the backward direction, of the main body 1 of the microwave oven, the lower portions of the partition plate 124 forming two plate 20 portions opposing each other. The partition plates 124 are designed to have such dimensions that the side walls of the shield plates 22 are always covered therewith during the vertical translation of the shield plates 22. Electromagnetic wave 25 absorbing members 123 fixed to the partition plates 124 along the entire lengths thereof that oppose the metal plates 30 form gaps V with the metal plates 30. Circular openings 25 and 86 are defined in the shield plates 22 and the translating 30 supporter plate 85 respectively.
As the eighth embodiment is constructed as hereinabove described, most of the electromagnetic waves leaking from the heating room 4 through the elongated openings 18 are 35 introduced into the choke rooms 24A and mutually cancelled therein by the choke effect. And because the shield plates 22 are in contact with the back surface of the back wall the heating room 4 and the backward facing surfaces of 40 partition plates 21 around the elongated ports 18 on the whole surface areas thereof, the electromagnetic waves can scarcely pass between the contacting surfaces. And the limited amount of electromagnetic waves passing between the 45 shield plates 22 and the back surface of the back wall of the heating box 3 and between the shield plates 22 and the backward facing surfaces of the partition plates 21 are absorbed by the absorbing member 29 or are mutually cancelled by the 50 choke effect in the gaps U. Further, the absorbing members 123 absorb the electromagnetic waves which escape from the gaps U, thereby realizing the almost complete prevention of the leakage of electromagnetic waves.
55 As the upper heater 19 is designed to be capable of disengagement from the terminal boxes 87, the circular openings 25 and 86,
defined in the shield plates 22 and the translating supporter plate 85 respectively, have a diameter 60 larger than the outer diameter of the upper heater 19. But the electromagnetic waves leaking through the circular openings 25 and 86 are extinguished by the leakage preventing chambers 42. When the upper heater 19 is designed to be 65 incapable of disengagement from the main body 1
of the microwave oven, the circular openings 25 and 86 can be made to have smaller diameters and to tightly fit with the upper heater 19. In this case the second leakage preventing chambers 42 70 can be omitted without incurring the danger of leakage through the circular openings 25 and 86. This is also true of the cases where other members such as detectors are used instead of . the upper heater 19.
75 Referring now to Figure 17 of the drawings, a ninth embodiment of the present invention wherein a detector 109 is vertically translatable is described.
The detector 109 disposed in the heating room 80 4 is similar to the detector 109 of the fifth embodiment. An insulator member 125 disposed in the casing 39 and formed of a material such as a ceramic or a refractory synthetic resin prevents steam generated in the heating room 4 from 85 entering into the second leakage preventing chamber 42 through the enlongated opening 18.
Gaps t are formed between the shield plate 22 and the back wall of the heating box 3 and between the backward facing surface of the shield 90 plate 22 and the partition plate 124. Gaps s are also formed between the metal plate 30 and the back wall of the heating box 3 and between the metal plate 30 and the backward facing surface of the partition plate 124.
95 In respects other than hereinabove described, the ninth embodiment is similar in construction to the eighth embodiment.
As the ninth embodiment is constructed as hereinabove described the detector can be 100 vertically translated without meeting any frictional force due to contacts between the shield plate 22 and the metal plate 30 with the back wall of the heating box 3 and the partition plate 124. Therefore the translating supporter plate 85 can 105 be translated easily without exertion by an operator.
Because of the disposition of the choke room 24A and the gaps v similar to the choke rooms 24A and the gaps v of the eighth embodiment, the 110 amount of the electromagnetic waves leaking through the gaps t and s is quite limited and substantially negligible.
Referring now to Figure 18 of the drawings, a tenth embodiment of the present invention 115 wherein a partition plate 114 similar to that of the sixth embodiment is vertically translatable is described.
A continuous thin coating 126 of about from 30 to 100 microns formed of a refractory material 120 having low heat conductance and low coefficient of friction, such as polytetrafluoroethylene, is coated on the back wall of the heating box 3 and the partition plate 124 in order to prevent direct contact between the shield plates 22 and the 125 metal plate 30 with the heating box 3 and the partition plate 124. In respects other than hereinabove described, the structure of this embodiment is similar to those of the last two embodiments.
130 The leakage of the electromagnetic waves in
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this embodiment is prevented in the same way as in the last two embodiments. The tenth embodiment has the advantage that the translation of the shield plates 22 with the 5 translating supporter plate 85 is made easy by the disposition of the coating 126, which also results in the advantage that the transfer of heat from the back wall of the heating box 3 to the shield plates 22 and the absorbing members 29 can be 10 effectively prevented and thus the shield plates 22 and the absorbing members 29 are free from the danger of being overheated.
The last three embodiments which have vertically translatable first leakage preventing 15 chambers 24 can also be subjected to many modifications.
For example, the coating 126 of the tenth embodiment may be an anodized insulator protective oxide film formed, for example, on an 20 aluminium plate. And although the choke rooms 24A are formed within the first leakage preventing chambers 24, it will be easily understood from the above descriptions that this formation of the choke rooms 24A within the leakage preventing 25 chambers 24 is not always necessary.
Although the first seven embodiments whose first leakage preventing chambers 24 are stationary with respect to the heating box 3 of the microwave oven are somewhat better in leakage 30 preventing faculty and can be constructed somewhat smaller than the latter three embodiments, all the embodiments are equally effective in operation. Therefore, it is possible to combine the features of the two groups of 35 embodiments. For example, the leakage preventing chambers 24 of the eighth embodiment may include therein further leakage preventing chambers which are similar in construction to the leakage preventing chambers 40 24 of the first or second embodiments, thereby further increasing the leakage preventing faculty thereof.
Referring now to Figures 19 to 22, the eleventh embodiment of the present invention is described. 45 As the eleventh embodiment is constructed in a similar way to the above described embodiments except for the structures of the portions including the first leakage preventing chambers 24, only the different structures thereof are described. 50 A pair of elongated openings 18 are defined in the back wall of the heating box 3 in parallel in the vertical direction. The length B of the openings 18 is equal to three times a quarter of the fundamental wave-length of the electromagnetic 55 waves utilized in the microwave oven.
The upper heater 19 has the end portions or terminal portions 19A extending through the elongated openings 18 and is vertically translatable along the elongated openings 18. A 60 pair of metal partition plates 127 is fixed on the back wall of the heating box 3 around the elongated openings 18. A pair of shield plates 22 in the form of casings with open front surfaces formed integrally by a press machine cover the 65 back side of the back wall of the heating box 3
around the elongated openings 18.
The shield plates 22 have defined in the central portions thereof circular openings 25 tightly fitted with the end portions 19A of the upper heater 19, 70 and thus are vertically translated with the upper heater 19, the flanges 23 thereof being in contact with the partition plates 127. The shield plates 22 have such dimensions that the back wall of the heating box 3 situated around the elongated 75 openings 18 are always covered by the shield plates 22 during the vertical translation thereof. Elongated openings 128 having dimensions corresponding to those of the elongated openings 18 are defined in the partition plates 127. Leakage 80 preventing chambers 24 formed between the partition plates 127 and the shield plates 22 have a widthwise depth E measured from the centers of the leakage preventing chambers 24 substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave-85 length, and a depth K substantially equal to one eighth of the fundamental wave-length.
Communication ports 26 of the leakage preventing chambers 24 are defined between the partition plates 127 and the shield plate 22. Metal 90 attenuator plates 129 disposed in the leakage preventing chambers 24 have defined therein a plurality of slits 130 of width g which are spaced from each other by a predetermined distance h. The length I of the slits 130 is equal to from 20 to 95 30 mm.
The bent portions 131 formed around the whole lengths of the peripheries of the partition plates 127 form attenuator plates 131 having defined therein a plurality of slits 133 which have 100 width k and are spaced from each other by a distance j. The length m of the slits 133 is made equal to from 10 to 15 mm, and the width k and the distance j are substantially equal to the corresponding dimensions g and h of the 105 attenuator plates 129.
As the eleventh embodiment of the present invention is constructed as described above, the electromagnetic waves which tend to leak from the interior of the heating room 4 through the 110 elongated openings 18 during the high frequency heating operation are substantially extinguished in the leakage preventing chambers 24 by the choke effect. Namely, the electromagnetic waves entering into the leakage preventing chambers 24 115 and propagating in the widthwise direction of the leakage preventing chambers 24 are mutually cancelled by the choke effect because the widthwise depth E is substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave length. 120 Although the electromagnetic waves propagating in the widthwise direction of the leakage preventing chambers 24 are extinguished by said choke effect in the leakage preventing chambers 24, the electromagnetic waves entering 125 into the leakage preventing chambers 24 also have the component propagating in the vertical direction of the leakage preventing chambers 24. Thus it was found preferable that the vertical component of the electromagnetic waves entering 130 into the leakage preventing chambers 24 also be
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extinguished or attenuated by some means other than the leakage preventing chambers 24 themselves.
In this embodiment, therefore, attenuator 5 plates 129 which attenuate the component of the electromagnetic waves propagating across the slits 130, that is to say, the component propagating in the vertical direction of the leakage preventing chambers 24, are disposed in the 10 leakage preventing chambers 24. Thus both horizontal and vertical components of the electromagnetic waves entering into the leakage preventing chambers 24 are mutually cancelled or attenuated.
15 Further, the electromagnetic waves which are not sufficiently attenuated in the leakage preventing chambers 24 and leak therefrom through the contacts between the partition plates 127 and the shield plate 22 are attenuated by the 20 attenuator plates 131 due to the function thereof corresponding to that of the attenuator plates 129. Thus the leakage of the electromagnetic waves through the contact between the partition plates 127 and the shield plates 22 is effectively 25 prevented.
The attenuator plates 129 and 131 in the above embodiment which are described as being formed of metal plates having defined therein a plurality of slits, may also be formed of synthetic 30 resin plate having coated thereon an electrically conductive layer having the form of the teeth of comb, or of metal plates bent into corrugated plates.
In all the eleven embodiments described above, 35 the vertical translation was effected manually by an operator through the translation mechanism. But it is also possible to use a prime mover such as an electric motor for the vertical translation, thereby simplifying the operation of the 40 translation.
Because according to the present invention the electromagnetic waves leaking from the interior of the heating room 4 through the elongated openings 18 are for the most part mutually 45 cancelled by the choke effect, the durability of the device is increased and the vertical translation of the member extending from the interior of the heating room 4 into the exterior thereof can be effected smoothly, as compared to the cases 50 where the elongated openings 18 are electromagnetically sealed by resilient plate members which are set in contact with said extending members.

Claims (26)

  1. 55 1. A high frequency heating apparatus,
    comprising: an enclosure defining a heating room for accommodating an article to be heated and having an elongated opening extending therethrough; electromagnetic wave supply 60 means for supplying electromagnetic waves substantially of a predetermined wave-length into said heating room for dielectric heating of said article; a movable member extending through said elongated opening from the interior to the exterior
    65 of said heating room; means for supporting and guiding said member with respect to said enclosure for a guided translational movement within and along said elongated opening in the enclosure; means for moving said guided member 70 within said elongated opening and holding the member at at least two positions; and electromagnetic wave leakage preventing means • for preventing an electromagnetic wave leakage from said heating room through said elongated 75 opening, including means for defining a substantially elongated annular space defined by an electrically conductive material and disposed along a periphery of said elongated opening, said annular space having a circumferentially extending 80 communication port at the inner periphery thereof for introducing therethrough the electromagnetic waves passing through said elongated opening into said annular space, said annular space being dimensioned to be effective for extinguishing by a 85 choke effect the electromagnetic wave introduced therein; whereby said member is translatable within said heating room while the leakage of the electromagnetic waves through said elongated opening is substantially prevented.
    90
  2. 2. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 1, wherein said electromagnetic wave leakage preventing means comprises a plate member attached to said supporting means and movable with respect to said enclosure for 95 substantially closing said elongated opening in the enclosure and the inner space defined by the inner periphery of said elongated annular space, said plate member being dimensioned to substantially close said elongated opening and said inner space 100 irrespective of the position of said supporting means.
  3. 3. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said elongated opening has a longitudinal length substantially
    105 equal to an odd multiple of a quarter of a fundamental wave length of said electromagnetic waves.
  4. 4. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said elongated
    110 opening has a longitudinal length substantially equal to an odd multiple of a quarter of a fundamental wave length of said electromagnetic waves, and said communication port of said first annular space is substantially hermetically sealed 115 by a cover member which is formed of a refractory material transparent to said electromagnetic waves.
  5. 5. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 4, wherein said cover member
    120 has a pair of parallel spaced elongated projections extending in the lengthwise direction of said elongated opening, said parallel projections being composed of a low friction material and dimensioned to guide said member in said space 125 between the projections.
  6. 6. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 2, wherein an electromagnetic wave absorbing material for absorbing and dissipating electromagnetic wave energy is
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    GB 2 055 280 A 14
    disposed in an electromagnetic wave leak path between said movable plate member and said elongated annular space.
  7. 7. A high frequency heating apparatus as 5 claimed in claim 6, wherein said elongated annular space defining means is attached to said enclosures, said movable plate member includes a pair of parallel flange portions substantially perpendicularly extending toward said enclosure 10 from a major flat portion of said plate member in a close but spaced relationship with respect to said elongated annular space defining means, and said absorbing material is attached to said flange portions, thereby providing a perpendicularly bent 15 leak path into which the leaking electromagnetic waves may be introduced and absorbed therein.
  8. 8. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 7, wherein said enclosure has thereon a pair of flanges on which said
    20 electromagnetic wave absorbing material is attached, said flanges forming, together with said major portion of said movable plate member, said flange portions of said movable plate member,
    said elongated annular space defining means and 25 said enclosure, a tortuous electromagnetic wave leakage path into which the leaking electromagnetic waves may be introduced and absorbed therein.
  9. 9. A high frequency heating apparatus as 30 claimed in any one of claims 1, 2, 6, 7 and 8,
    wherein said leakage preventing means comprises a substantially annular space defined by an electrically conductive material and disposed on and about said extending member, said second 35 annular space having a circumferentially extending communication port at the inner periphery thereof for introducing therethrough the electromagnetic waves passing through said inner space of said first annular space into said second annular space, 40 said second annular space being dimensioned to be effective for extinguishing by the choke effect the electromagnetic waves introduced therein.
  10. 10. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any one of claims 2, 6, 7, 8 and 9,
    45 wherein said defining means comprises a portion of said enclosure around said elongated opening and said movable plate member covering said elongated opening and having a substantially annular flange portion extending from a major flat 50 surface of said plate member toward said enclosure, said elongated annular space being defined between said enclosure and said plate member.
  11. 11. A high frequency heating apparatus as 55 claimed in claim 10, wherein said elongated opening in the enclosure has at its periphery a substantially annular flange integrally extending therefrom toward said major fiat portion of the plate member by a predetermined distance to 60 form said communication port between said flange and said plate member.
  12. 12. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 11, wherein said flange portion of the plate member includes a bent extension
    65 defining therein a substantially annular cavity with a circumferential communication port for extinguishing the electromagnetic waves by the choke effect.
  13. 13. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 12, wherein said movable plate member includes a second substantially elongated annular flange having an electromagnetic wave absorbing material attached on its inner surface.
  14. 14. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein said portion of the enclosure surrounding said elongated opening has attached thereon a pair of spaced parallel flanges with an electromagnetic wave absorbing material on their inner surfaces, said parallel flanges forming, together with said second flange on the movable plate member, a tortuous electromagnetic wave leak path where the electromagnetic waves which may enter therein is absorbed by said electromagnetic wave absorbing material.
  15. 15. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 14, wherein said flanges on said movable plate member are in direct contact with said enclosure.
  16. 16. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 14, wherein said flanges on said movable plate member are spaced from said enclosure.
  17. 17. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 14, wherein said portion of the enclosure around said elongated opening is coated with polytetrafiuoroethylene and said flanges on said movable plate member are in contact with said coating.
  18. 18. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 11 in said electromagnetic wave leakage preventing means comprises an attenuator plate attached to an inner surface of said flange portion of said movable plate member and extending parallel to said major flat portion of the plate member.
  19. 19. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in claim 18, wherein said electromagnetic wave leakage preventing means further comprises a second attenuator plate attached on the outer surface of said enclosure and extending in parallel to said flange portion of the movable plate member.
  20. 20. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 19, wherein said extending member extending through said elongated opening in the enclosure comprises a resistance heater.
  21. 21. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 19, wherein said extending member comprises a temperature detector.
  22. 22. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 19, wherein said extending member comprises a humidity detector.
  23. 23. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 19, wherein said extending member comprises a support rod for a supporter for the article to be heated disposed in said enclosure.
    70
    75
    80
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    15
    GB 2 055 280 A 15
  24. 24. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 19, wherein said extending member comprises a support rod for a partition disposed in said enclosure.
    5
  25. 25. A high frequency heating apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein said moving and holding means comprises means for selectively positioning said extending member at said at least two positions within said elongated
    10 opening, said at least two positions being at substantially equal intervals substantially equal to a quarter of the fundamental wave length of said electromagnetic waves.
  26. 26. A high frequency heating apparatus 15 substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
    Printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office by the Courier Press, Leamington Spa, 1981. Published by the Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC2A 1AY, from which copies may be obtained.
GB8024882A 1979-07-30 1980-07-30 High frequency heating apparatus Expired GB2055280B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP9714679A JPS5622087A (en) 1979-07-30 1979-07-30 High frequency heater
JP2012480A JPS56118290A (en) 1980-02-20 1980-02-20 High frequency heater
JP3828280U JPS6021918Y2 (en) 1980-03-24 1980-03-24 High frequency heating device
JP3827980U JPS6127118Y2 (en) 1980-03-24 1980-03-24

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2055280A true GB2055280A (en) 1981-02-25
GB2055280B GB2055280B (en) 1983-03-02

Family

ID=27457322

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8024882A Expired GB2055280B (en) 1979-07-30 1980-07-30 High frequency heating apparatus

Country Status (2)

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US (1) US4357513A (en)
GB (1) GB2055280B (en)

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FR2613044B1 (en) * 1987-03-27 1989-06-30 Newtec Internal MICROWAVE HEATING PROCESS, ESPECIALLY A FOOD PRODUCT, PARTICULARLY COMPRISING A BREAD SLICER AND A LINING AND MICROWAVE OVEN FOR IMPLEMENTING THE PROCESS
KR950019405A (en) * 1993-12-04 1995-07-24 이헌조 Microwave Oven Cavity Protection Device
KR0136606Y1 (en) * 1995-07-24 1999-03-20 구자홍 Rolling device of heater for microwave oven
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US6677563B2 (en) 2001-12-14 2004-01-13 Graphic Packaging Corporation Abuse-tolerant metallic pattern arrays for microwave packaging materials
US7414229B2 (en) * 2005-01-04 2008-08-19 Hellmann Michael G Disposable microwave food shield
US7586068B2 (en) * 2005-01-04 2009-09-08 Peter Shaw Disposable microwave food shield
US20060144384A1 (en) * 2005-01-05 2006-07-06 Giovanni Santagata Barbeque grill
US7145118B1 (en) * 2005-08-22 2006-12-05 Ming-Jing Wu Microwave oven protective circuit arrangement
US20100044362A1 (en) * 2008-08-19 2010-02-25 Ya-Ping Huang Oven Having An Adjustable Effective Heating Space
KR101617283B1 (en) * 2009-05-04 2016-05-02 엘지전자 주식회사 Cooker and Control method of the same
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GB2055280B (en) 1983-03-02
US4357513A (en) 1982-11-02

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